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College Accountability, From the Left

November 3, 2009

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WASHINGTON -- The Center for American Progress has impeccable credentials for the Obama era. In the same way that the right-leaning Heritage Foundation and American Enterprise Institute had the attention of the Bush administration, the Center for American Progress, headed by the former Clinton confidante John Podesta, is the think tank for the current White House. Time magazine called the center "Obama's idea factory" after his election last year.

Which makes the center's new white paper on higher education all the more interesting -- and, perhaps, all the more concerning to some college leaders.

The document, "Putting the Customer First in College," calls on the U.S. Education Department to create an Office of Consumer Protection in Higher Education that would (1) pressure colleges to produce significantly better data on how well they serve students, (2) develop a system for making that data available for students to use in choosing a college, and (3) direct students unhappy with their colleges' educational practices to federal, state, or accrediting officials who can help them resolve their complaints.

"In most sectors of our economy, customer focus is paramount, as it should be in education, too," the author, Louis Soares, writes in the paper. "Customer focus could yield a more student-centric system through the development and dissemination of user-friendly 'truth-in-education' information that helps students make 'best-fit' choices regarding which education provider to select based on customer preferences such as: academic quality, price, convenience, learning style, beginning education level and the anticipated return on their investment in education."

He adds: "The Office of Consumer Protection in Higher Education can be a powerful agent for righting [an] imbalance of knowledge and helping students succeed in college and save money to boot."

If that language sounds vaguely familiar, it should -- it echoes ideas inherent in Margaret Spellings' Commission on the Future of Higher Education, which similarly bemoaned the lack of available data to help families and parents decide which institutions would best suit and serve them.

Perhaps not surprisingly, Charles Miller, who headed the Spellings panel, largely embraced the paper by Soares, saying (via e-mail) that it "could be a game changer" because of its "focus on the student as a consumer in a regulatory scheme."

"If the academy and its leaders in the associations and institutions react in a hostile way to this idea, or even with their usual delay and obfuscation, it will be a serious and tragic mistake," Miller wrote. "Similar to what happened in the reauthorization of the Higher Education Act, the academy will end up getting pressure for more reports and stricter regulation instead of being active participants in planning and implementing an effective data system."

And also unsurprisingly, officials of several college associations dismissed the need for another federal initiative that would pump yet more data into the public domain and, potentially, add to the information demands on colleges and universities. A solution in search of a problem, several of them suggested.

"I don't think the problem is a lack of information for students -- there is probably too much out there for them to wade through as it is," said Frank Balz, vice president for research and policy analysis at the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities. "And it's hard to see how adding a layer of bureaucracy will improve anything."

Empowering Students

Soares, director of the postsecondary education program at the Center for American Progress, does not shy away from the analogy to the Spellings Commission, though he takes a slightly different approach befitting his background primarily in adult education and work force development.

"From a policy perspective, the idea that for all the public investment we put in higher ed, we're going to add an accountability piece to our traditional emphasis on affordability seems like a natural outgrowth," Soares said in an interview.

While that may seem like an idea that was right at home in the Bush administration, Soares acknowledged, his emphasis fits right in with his center's "progressive" tradition: accountability as a form of consumer advocacy.

"If students are investing in this educational service, how do they know what they’re buying?" he said. This has not historically been a problem for the better off students who apply to selective private colleges and public universities, Soares said; they have U.S. News & World Report, warts and all, and more importantly "social networks and social capital that help them make those choices."

Not so with the vast remainder of students, for whom clearcut information about which community college or for-profit college will give them the best chance of getting a job if they get an engineering degree or participate in an apprenticeship program, for instance, is hard to come by.

It's not that there is a shortage of data, per se, Soares argues. It's that most of the information that the government now collects, and that colleges themselves choose to release, focuses on the affordability and access questions that have traditionally dominated higher education policy making at both the federal and state levels. Producing and sharing reliable information about how students actually fare is much harder to find.

Soares' paper is silent on the question of how better data on student outcomes might be produced, and when asked, he sidesteps a question about whether he favors a national system of student-level academic records that the Spellings Commission advocated for tracking students' performance throughout the education system and into the work force -- and that privacy advocates and private college officials aggressively fought.

But he expresses respect for the argument -- which those groups also made forcefully -- that it would be wrong to try to impose a one-size-fits-all definition of student success on all institutions.

"If you believe that the decentralized way our postsecondary system is set up actually works -- and I generally do -- you have to figure out a way to build a flexible accountability into the system. You want to protect that," he said. While he argues for a central Office of Consumer Protection housed in the Education Department, he suggests that most of its work -- including working with states and regional accreditors to gather and distribute useful data -- would fall to 10 regional "college customer ombudsmen."

"The regional advocate approach is designed to acknowledge that states are going to have ways they deal with this stuff, and to try to introduce customer-centric accountability in a way that preserves decentralization," he added.

While the Center for American Progress's proposal shares with the Spellings Commission a thirst for better and more widely shared data, it also emphasizes a kind of consumer protection against ill treatment of students to which the Bush era panel paid no attention. A major role of the ombudsmen as Soares conceives them, in addition to driving the sharing of data about student outcomes, would be guarding against overly aggressive college marketing tactics, ensuring that students aren't coerced into accepting undesirable forms of financial aid, and helping students who believe they've been misled by their institutions about graduation or job placement rates.

That's the sort of advocacy that consumer groups have long thought was necessary to protect students from some for-profit colleges, an idea that the Obama administration appears to be taking to heart. Soares said that while "we mostly have had that discussion in the context of for-profit schools," he is not aiming to single out those institutions, noting that some institutions of all types have graduation and completion rates that are so low as to raise concern.

Judging from the reactions to Soares' proposal, he appears to have successfully avoided singling out any one sector for scrutiny. Balz from the independent college group wasn't alone in thinking that creating a new federal entity to protect students was unnecessary; Harris N. Miller, president and CEO of the Career College Association, too, took issue with the center's premises that students don't have any advocates and that they lack good data about institutions' performance.

"Our institutions, at least, make enormous amounts of information [about student outcomes] available under federal requirements, accreditation requirements, and Federal Trade Commission requirements," Miller said. "I just don’t accept the premise that students don’t have access to that information. I'm just not sure that the problem is as he paints it."

Barmak Nassirian, associate executive director of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers, said he was sympathetic to the "very real" problem that Soares and the center were trying to solve: that "we have a gate-keeping system that was designed for the convenience of providers, and that does not adequately protect students and the taxpayers."

But the group's proposed solution, he said in an e-mail message, is far from ideal. While colleges should provide good information to their students, and accreditors and other watchdogs should ensure that the institutions are producing good outcomes for their students, "assigning [these tasks] to an external agency ... won’t fully resolve the problems that they are hoping to address."

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Comments on College Accountability, From the Left

  • Trans-Atlantic policy fusion
  • Posted by Tim Birtwistle , Professor Emeritus of Law & Policy of Higher Education at Leeds Metropolitan University, U.K. on November 3, 2009 at 6:30am EST
  • The British government will today present to Parliament a view for the future of higher education. Change some words and nuances but in reality (according to all leaks) exactly the same notion of the student as a consumer, the student in need of better data and information and the umbilical link between "value for money", funding and jobs shines through. Perhaps money was saved by this joint approach?

  • Reporting Paradoxes and Limitations
  • Posted by David Eubanks on November 3, 2009 at 7:30am EST
  • In order for the"enormous amounts of information" to be comparable, it would have to be standardized, meaning reduced in complexity until it assesses only the most basic levels of performance. This would defeat the purpose. Additionally, the information we have is incomplete. I would say outcomes assessment has some maturing to do before we get to this point. For an illustration of what can go wrong, see http://highered.blogspot.com/2009/11/learning-and-intelligence.html

  • Student accountability
  • Posted by Jody , sociology at community college on November 3, 2009 at 8:30am EST
  • I truly appreciate all of this work and I do believe that the concept of students as consumers is true--but, it is also up to the student to do the work. My analogy I have used in classes is buying a piece of clothing that then hangs in the closet. I bought it but I never wear it...it's not the shirt's fault, I never took advantage of it hanging there to wear it. The shirt was made well, etc and I bought it but I chose not wear it. College can be somewhat like that-the college choosen may be doing it's job but if the student does not come to class, do the reading and thinking, they will most likely fail. Now that statistic becomes an outcome for the college along with a failing grade for the student.

    Is it always the college's fault? Is it always the student's fault? No to both. Until there is a way to balance these issues, this proposal concerns me.

  • Consumers??!!!??? Seriously??
  • Posted by Professor Flustered , Philosophy at Small public liberal arts technical college on November 3, 2009 at 9:15am EST
  • Students are NOT consumers. Workers buying job training would be consumers. If everyone wants to dump education and turn our IHE's into vocational schools, then fine--do so. The funding sources should have a say in what their money goes to . . . but if you really want to use the term "student," then please stop making "education" mean "job training."

  • left again?
  • Posted by Theron on November 3, 2009 at 9:15am EST
  • The headline blares: "College Accountability, From the Left." Luckily, the story itself does not repeat this mantra. What is "Left" about a call to further consumerize education? Sounds more like a business model to me.

    While it IS crucial that students choose their colleges wisely and that they need data to do so, the tenor of this article further emphasizes that education is a product "off the shelf." One post alludes to this with the shirt in the closet analogy, asking if a student does not act, is it the college's fault? By continuing to portray college as a consumable and not a process, articles like this and the report it presents make it difficult for students to make the transition from high school to college with its different set of expectations and strategies. How can students know to engage the learning process when they are led to believe all they need to do is to show up and "do the homework?" I trust that education as process somehow makes it into this data mix.

  • Posted by Just Say No on November 3, 2009 at 9:30am EST
  • Thankfully Frank and the others are still on script. It would really disrupt my world if they said anything different. NAICU really ought to change its name to the National Association of Saying No to Anything That Might Help Students Apart from More Pell Money that Actually Goes to Us.

  • two points
  • Posted by Eric Odgaard , Assistant Professor of Psychology at University of South Florida St. Petersburg on November 3, 2009 at 12:45pm EST
  • Theron, yes, it's yet another push for the failed business model (well, the half that doesn't involve paying PhDs what they make in industry, anyway). But it's the proposal of a government oversight committee that makes it "left" -- the regulation, as is were.

    Second, I found the actual white paper a fascinating read. As I sifted through the repeated proposals that glossed over the fact that in order to work they would require unprecedented precision and variance accounted for in a massive bit of psychometrics, one thought kept coming back to me ...

    ... when it comes to higher education proposals, never trust a group that doesn't realize that the word "data" is plural.

  • Posted by Something to Think About on November 3, 2009 at 12:45pm EST
  • I agree that it is the institution's responsibility to remove roadblocks and support student during their higher education experience, however it is not within the realm of possibility for the institution to open the student’s head and pour in knowledge as is conveyed by writings regarding higher education effectiveness. As one reviews and discusses the difference between student enrollments in colleges as compared to graduation rates, no one discusses the trend line -- are there higher graduation rates now than 40 year ago?

     

    When one reviews and discusses the differences in enrollments and graduation rates, no one discusses the responsibility of the student to be prepared, to attend class, to participate -- that education requires a teacher and a student. A college and classroom can be well developed to engage the student -- but engagement requires a student who wants to be engaged.

     

    So often when higher education is discussed it is spoken in terms of preparing for a job. An education prepares for life as well as for work. Many times college programs are assessed as to the graduates obtaining jobs in their chosen field. I have heard educators and legislators decry certain degrees as not needed for the number of graduates and jobs available: This argument is stating that if you are a college graduate who majored in Physical Education and now occupy a legislative seat, you are a failure because you are not using your degree, you do not work as a physical educator, physical fitness trainer, recreation director, ..... Interactions and communication with businesses and government offices require a higher education just to engage and persist in the consumer oriented red tape. Again education is about living and making a living -- It is both -- One is not exclusive over the other.

     

    For years researchers, testing businesses, and political leaders have poked at our secondary schools and cried failure. The response to the cry was an increase in standards -- if students are not performing -- we increase standards, announce that our schools are inferior and are students are not learning, that our teachers do not care, and that schools should do more with less. Psychology would tell us that if we tell our students and teachers that they are failures they will live up to our expectations. The news media, the think tank reports, and the rhetoric put forth by businesses selling tests have not highlighted what is good with our schools only what is bad -- and they print what is bad in big red letters year after year. And year after year test results decline. They compared our education style with that of other countries without considering cultural differences. We as Americans have cherish creativity and ingenuity, do we still? Or do we seek students who make A's and decry those who make C's? Do we believe that all American's are created equal in intelligence, creativity, abilities, skills... if yes we are boring and there is no uniqueness. Yet we know we are all different and excel differently, let us consider that as we develop our schools and colleges as learning institutions, assisting students to develop to their potential, without penalty for their differences. Let us not treat them as robots, but as humans.

     

    Obtaining data that provides information on what happens to students during their college experience requires personnel that does not exist on college campuses and that will not exist in this economic downturn where colleges are cutting positions and student support is thinned by the increased enrollments. It is not as easy as having a student complete a form on the computer and assimilating the data into a report. That can be attested to by any consultant who works with colleges on student engagement.

     

    Regarding consumer -- students are students -- if there is a component of higher education that can be related to a seller-consumer environment, that is the enrollment, admissions, and registration process. One might argue that course design and delivery falls into this category. I would agree, but it must also be recognized that a good teacher might be a bad teacher to a different student because of personal attributes -- that is human. The definition of consumer by Webster is not applicable to education unless we accept that the student consumes education -- thus we have accepted that the student is an active player.

     

    Main Entry: con·sum·er

     

    Usage: often attributive

    Date: 15th century

    : one that consumes: as a: one that utilizes economic goods b: an organism requiring complex organic compounds for food which it obtains by preying on other organisms or by eating particles of organic matter — compare producer 3

    Let us not forget that the United States still has the Best Higher Education System in the World -- Let us put that up in big red letters as we seek to continually improve.

  • Ahead of the Game
  • Posted by John Ebersole , President at Excelsior College on November 3, 2009 at 12:45pm EST
  • A group of 14 adult-serving colleges and universities are already at work providing the data suggested by this article. Working with the Western Interstate Consortium of Higher Education (WICHE)under a Lumina Foundation grant, these institutions are using nationally normed assessment instruments such as the NSSE and the MAPP to measure and report learning outcomes down to the program level. They also provide comparable data to a WICHE maintained Web site on average time to completion, cost, and alumni satisfaction. This "Transparency By Design" initiative has been underway since 2006 and was initially sponsored by the President' Forum. Participants include institutions that are public and private, for-profit and not-for-profit, and include a community college and a graduate only institution.

    The Academy HAS heard the call for greater accountability and transparecy and IS responding. A DOE office to "pressure" higher education is not the answer. If we are patient and believe in a free market economy (as well as the idea of "consumers), competitive factors will provide what federal force cannot.

  • Reading between the lines
  • Posted by Charlotte Pressler on November 3, 2009 at 12:45pm EST
  • The student-as-customer/consumer language used by the Center for American Progress in this memo is outdated as well as noisome. That said (and I expect others will say it) a point is being made that has nothing to do with the usual student-as-customer perspective.

    What this "consumer protection agency" intends to guarantee for students is the academic quality of college and university programs of study. That badly needs doing, let's face it. There are too many programs out there of all kinds selling junk degrees at inflated prices to students who find out too late that their high-priced credential means nothing.

    One point needs to be made forcefully. The quality of students' credentials can't be guaranteed unless instructors are empowered once again to make appropriate demands of their students while they are in their programs of study, and fail them if they do not meet the standards set by the program. Frankly, we've not had that power for over twenty years, and it's showing in the quality (or lack thereof) of our graduates.

    Yes, let's by all means develop support services for motivated but struggling students. Let's do everything possible to get students up to speed. Let's fund the needed research on college success strategies. At the same time, let's also demand that students do what needs to be done to earn their credentials, and, if need be, show them how to do what needs to be done.

  • FORTY YEARS AGO TODAY .....
  • Posted by Glen S. McGhee , Dir., at Florida Higher Education Accountability Project on November 3, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • Let's start with the need for "an ombudsman for students with state officials and regional accrediting agencies to ... direct student customers to the appropriate officials when they have grievances with their education provider."

    For decades, State agencies regulating for-profits have had a very strong customer-focus, especially when it comes to handling student compliants. Soares needs to recognize this, and he needs to recognize the fact that the "Program Integrity" provisions of the HEA (including current negotiated rulemaking proposals) already "direct student customers to the appropriate officials when they have grievances with their education provider."

    All of this is already in place, even if it is barely operational. The problems are with the regional accreditors, and the state agencies that shield their public schools from complaints -- that is to say, where an ivory-tower guild mentality prevails, and where a consumer-focus is completely lacking.

    Even when students have been directed to the "appropriate official," it is unlikely that they will get a straight answer, or an appropriate response; more than likely they will simply be ignored, stonewalled or worse, lied to.

    Part of the problem lies with the lack of jurisdiction and lack of authority granted to accreditors -- they simply haven't been given the tools to correct problems at the institutions they regulate.

    Did I just say "regulate"? Well, this is an oversimplification -- regional and national accreditors are not yet regulators (another fundamental problem that Soares misses) in the true sense of the word, even though federal interests have been working at transforming the original "volunteer peer-review oversight associations" into quasi-govermental regulators for the last fifty-years.

    But even after fifty-years of concerted effort, state and regional accreditors have resisted their gradual transformation into public service commissions. Given the magnitude of the changes needed, and the level of structural inertia at these organizations, it is difficult to see how yet another bureaucratic service-desk can help students navigate the deep moat around the ivory tower.

    This, of course, is why for-profits, when they can afford it, prefer accreditation to the gauntlet of state review and approval. Once they receive guild protection, they reap the benefits of increased protection from angry consumers and the prying eyes of those interested in truth-in-education, or educational quality.

    A lot is missing from Soares' report, including the past history of failed attempts to inject accountability, transparency, and a consumer focus into higher ed accreditation in this country.

    Almost forty-years ago, the Puffer Report called for the creation of a national agency with ultimate authority over institutional accrediting that would more closely resemble a “public utility commission with a responsibility for protecting the public [that] becomes less oriented toward the membership and more toward the public as a whole” (Puffer, Vol. I: 261).

    The Obama Team would do well to familiarize themselves with the suggestions of the Puffer Report, which included breaking up regional accreditors, such as NCA and SACS, which were deemed much too large to be effective, to better serve their constituencies (Puffer Vol. I: 276).

  • Posted by Ignoble on November 3, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • Let them double down on the student-as-consumer model, "regulations" and all. As the consumer-driven US economy continues to collapse, slowly but steadily, in the long term, the higher education consumer scam will go with it.

  • Get real
  • Posted by Jonathan Hilley , Founder, TAG at The Ascendance Group on November 3, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • Jody, I respectfully disagree with your view. In fact, it reeks of self-interest. Here's why your analogy makes no sense:

    Unlike a shirt, college represents the 2nd largest "investment" someone will likely make in their lifetime (behind a home). The order of magnitude argues for greater transparency, greater information and much closer scrutiny.

    Secondly, the merits of Soares' proposal are 100% just - he's arguing for greater transparency and better information so consumers can make more informed decisions. What's not to like about that?

    In my opinion, this is a groundbreakingly positive development. It's about time institutions of higher education were exposed for their increasingly poor return on investment and lack of focus when it comes to helping students get a job. I present a much more complete argument here: http://blog.theascendancegroup.org/post/what-do-colleges-and-drug-companies-have-in-common/.

  • "Left" once again!
  • Posted by DFS on November 3, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • Anyone, even Theron, who wonders why the C.A.P. is considered leftist only needs to read -- and try to refute -- this article:

    http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/groupProfile.asp?grpid=6709

    I suppose that if you're all the way to the left, everyone else may look to be of some weird ilk.

  • Posted by Glen S. McGhee , Dir., at Florida Higher Education Accountability Project on November 3, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • Let's start with the need for "an ombudsman for students with state officials and regional accrediting agencies to ... direct student customers to the appropriate officials when they have grievances with their education provider."

    For decades, State agencies regulating for-profits have had a very strong customer-focus, especially when it comes to handling student compliants. Soares needs to recognize this, and he needs to recognize the fact that the "Program Integrity" provisions of the HEA already "direct student customers to the appropriate officials when they have grievances with their education provider."

    All of this is already in place, even if it is barely operational. The problems are with the regional accreditors, and the state agencies that shield their public schools from complaints -- that is to say, where an ivory-tower guild mentality prevails, and where a consumer-focus is completely lacking.

    Even when students have been directed to the "appropriate official," it is unlikely that they will get a straight answer, or an appropriate response; more than likely they will simply be ignored, stonewalled or lied to.

    Part of the problem lies with the lack of jurisdiction and lack of authority granted to accreditors -- they simply haven't been given the tools to correct problems at the institutions they regulate.

    Did I just say "regulate"? Well, this is an oversimplification -- regional and national accreditors are not yet regulators in the true sense of the word, even though federal interests have been working at transforming the original "volunteer peer-review oversight associations" into quasi-govermental regulators for the last fifty-years.

    But even after fifty-years of concerted effort, state and regional accreditors have resisted their gradual transformation into public service commissions. Given the magnitude of the changes needed, and the level of structural inertia at these organizations, it is difficult to see how yet another bureaucratic service-desk can help students navigate the deep moat around the ivory tower.

    A lot is missing from this short report, including the past history of failed attempts to inject accountability, transparency, and a consumer focus into higher ed accreditation in this country.

  • Jonathan Hilley
  • Posted by cts on November 3, 2009 at 4:00pm EST
  • Jody's comment was hardly 'self-serving.' Her point is that students are not the purchasers of a product. Perhaps a better analogy for her would be between education and health or physical fitness. You can pay for the services of a professional to help you in these processes, but only you can do the work that will ensure your success. Moreoever, the price of the service is not relevant to the sense of the analogy.

    I am all for transparency and more [intelligent] assessment of learning outcomes. But the colleges and faculty cannot make anyone learn. Too many young people are going into higher ed on the parental dme and not making the most of the opportunity. Faculty, who are assessed partly by student evaluations and course enrollments, cannot impose the standards they believe are necessary for student achievement without risk, and parents are more likely to fault the facutly for the student's failures than to fault the student herself.